Cape Argus

Mantashe scolds ANC for losing touch with the people

- Gadeeja Abbas

THE ANC should look beyond “selfish gains and greed” and seek to reconnect with the people, the ruling party’s secretary-general Gwede Mantashe warned yesterday.

Delivering the OR Tambo memorial lecture, Mantashe invoked the memory of the liberation leader and former ANC president, who died in 1993, to scold the party of today.

Mantashe told an audience of ANC leaders and members at Abedare Primary School in Delft they should learn from Tambo’s style of leadership.

Tambo, who served as ANC president from 1967 to 1991 and would have been 99 yesterday, was honoured at a number of events across the country, including a wreath-laying ceremony led by President Jacob Zuma.

“Oliver Reginald Tambo brought into the movement some exceptiona­l attributes,” Mantashe said. “Collective­ly, his experience moulded the nature and character of our movement, including how we tackled the liberation struggle. As leaders, we must all ask ourselves ‘what have I learned from the life of OR Tambo?’.”

Mantashe said Tambo had the ability to understand his organisati­on and his cadres, something which was “missing today”.

“Any liberation movement aspires to represent the interested aspiration­s of the majority. It is not a threat for the ANC in

power, it is a threat for the liberation movement not to represent the vast majority. When you lose that (the focus on representi­ng the vast majority), you risk becoming something else,” he told a cheering crowd.

“The questions that we must ask in our organisati­on is: What kind of leadership are we?

“What is the basis of our leadership? Can we elevate ourselves over our actions or are we enslaved to them? If actions imprisoned us, we cannot move. We must ask when was this decision taken? Is it a decision of a faction? What kind of government have we become?

“Are we asking ourselves what people are even saying? Are they asking what we are doing, what have we done so wrong that people question the ANC of Oliver Tambo?”

Faiez Jacobs, ANC’s provincial secretary could be heard cheering with the crowd as Mantashe spoke.

Earlier yesterday, Jacobs had appeared in the Cape Town Magistrate’s Court after a colleague accused him of assault last year. Jacobs is said to have punched and kicked him. The case will head to trial.

Mantashe said society expected the ANC leadership to act with decorum, according to high standards. “The leader must invoke the loyalty and dedication of the people. OR Tambo establishe­d himself as principled, he proved beyond a doubt that when there were allegation­s against someone close to him, he did not just reject that, he took a hard line .... We must not condone labelling because it destroys individual­s.”

Mantashe concluded by saying members of the ANC should look beyond “selfish gains and greed” and “become the ANC Tambo had died for”.

 ?? PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE ?? ON STAGE: ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe, left, and Western Cape provincial secretary Faiez Jacobs. Mantashe delivered the OR Tambo Memorial Lecture at the Abedare Primary School in Delft yesterday.
PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE ON STAGE: ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe, left, and Western Cape provincial secretary Faiez Jacobs. Mantashe delivered the OR Tambo Memorial Lecture at the Abedare Primary School in Delft yesterday.

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